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Jorge Argueta (born in El Salvador and a Pipil Nahua Indian) [1] is a Salvadoran award-winning poet and author of many highly acclaimed bilingual children's books and short stories, covering themes related to Latino culture and traditions, nature, and the immigrant experience.
Eliza Acton (17 April 1799 – 13 February 1859) was an English food writer and poet who produced one of Britain's first cookery books aimed at the domestic reader, Modern Cookery for Private Families.
The poem may have been inspired by James Cook's second voyage of exploration (1772–1775) of the South Seas and the Pacific Ocean; Coleridge's tutor, William Wales, was the astronomer on Cook's flagship and had a strong relationship with Cook.
Read article The Cooking With Just Christine host, 50, posted an Instagram video on Monday, December 12, that showed her reciting William Ernest Henley’s “Invictus,” which was originally ...
How to Cook a Wolf was written following the attack on Pearl Harbor, which led to the American entry in World War II, when Fisher (then known to society as Mrs. Dillwyn Parrish) returned to California from already-war-torn Europe and wrote a well-received guide to blackout curtains and crisis cooking for her father's paper, the Whittier News.
In a meta-analysis from 2018, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) did a deep dive on 11 studies exploring the mental health benefits of cooking and found that "cooking interventions ...
Vertamae Smart-Grosvenor (April 4, 1937 – September 3, 2016) was an American culinary anthropologist, griot, poet, food writer, and broadcaster on public media.Born into a Gullah family in the Low Country of South Carolina, she moved with them as a child to Philadelphia during the Great Migration.
In her 1754 book Professed Cookery, Glasse's contemporary Ann Cook launched an aggressive attack on The Art of Cookery using both a doggerel poem, with couplets such as "Look at the Lady in her Title Page, How fast it sells the Book, and gulls the Age", [21] and an essay; the poem correctly accused Glasse of plagiarism. [17] [21]